“…McLean (2018) categorises integration based on the circumstances and motivations from which it arose. A wide range of conditions are similarly posited by others as supporting integrated infrastructure approaches, including aligning and making transparent the goals of infrastructure integration (Alexandra 2017; McLean 2018; Zonneveld and Spaans 2014), and integration between infrastructure and place contexts (Arts et al 2016). Conversely, common barriers to infrastructure integration include issues of scalar mismatch, such as disconnects between infrastructure impact, responsibility and authority (Makarewicz et al 2018), path dependency issues such as legacies of poor knowledge transfer (Schuch et al 2017), ownership issues such as through legal and regulatory separation of infrastructure types (Arts et al 2016), and poor evaluation processes leading to mismatched funding (George et al 2019).…”